| > You could make the same argument about paper. "That's just how photocopiers work! If you don't want your creations to be endlessly duplicated and sold, don't write them down!" No, the argument would be about photocopies, not paper. "That's just how photocopiers work! Don't put something into a photocopier if you don't want photocopies of it." It isn't possible for anyone to access anything on the internet without making copies of that thing. Copies are literally how the internet works. Shooting everyone who steps outside isn't how guns work either so that also fails as an analogy. The internet was specifically designed for the global distribution of copies. If that isn't what you want, don't publish your works there. > That something is technically possible doesn't make it morally right. Morality is entirely different from how the internet works, but in practice, I don't see anything immoral about making a copy of something. Morality only becomes an issue when it comes to what someone does with that copy. |
"Women are oppressed in Iran. Well, that's just how Iran is. Just leave it if you don't want to be oppressed"
Oh my. Yea, and whatever is some way, is that way – "it is how it is, deal with it". It's an empty statement. The topic is an ethical and political discussion in light of current technologies. It's a question of whether it should work this way. That's how all moral questions come about – by asking if something should be the way it is. And the current state of technology brings a dilemma that hasn't existed before.
And no, the internet was not designed for that. Quite obviously. Sounds like you haven't heard of private messages.
I'm very surprised this has to be stated.